
Getting started is as simple as signing up, then you can upload files and browse them in Backblaze’s web interface, or use any one of hundreds of solutions that incorporate Backblaze B2 seamlessly, such as the popular (and free) Cyberduck SFTP file browser. You can make the largest reduction quickly by shifting videos, image libraries, and data sets out of Google Drive and into Backblaze B2 Cloud Storage.īackblaze B2, of course, is our easy-to-use cloud storage that stores everything you want to protect at only $5/TB per month, and it makes everything you store there immediately available to you, the instant you need it. If you’re looking for an incredible cloud storage offering, read on to learn about Backblaze B2 Cloud Storage.

If you just need a solid backup, check out our guide on backing up your G Suite data.

This article focuses on solutions for teams using Side Note: Backblaze has proudly offered unlimited backup plans at a fixed price for close to 14 years, and we’ll continue to do so. You’re going to need a plan to not only reduce your storage footprint on Google, but also safely store the content you’re forced to move while making it available and useful for your users. If you’ve been using G Suite for long, and especially if you work with large data sets or rich media, you’re probably using more than 2TB per user. But as is true in restaurants: If you need to ask, it’s probably more expensive than you’d care to know. It’s unclear how much that costs because their pricing chart refers you to a sales representative if you want to get a quote. G Suite users have to upgrade to the Enterprise class of service to retain unlimited storage. Hat tip to Jacob Hands who alerted us about this on Twitter! So it was a bit of a shock for lots of G Suite users to learn that they now only get 2TB per user for their $12 per user per month plan. But when we have unlimited data, we tend to forget about how much our content is growing until someone tells us our unlimited data plan is now… limited?

It’s easy to get used to “all you can eat” data plans-and one of the biggest justifications to use G Suite until now was that users could store as much as they wanted.
